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Yeah, up on Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa. At 10,000-12,000 feet and higher, it really does snow in Hawaii sometimes.

I've been to the summit of Mauna Kea (~13,800 ft) once and it was COLD up there despite the fact that we were there in August.

Edit: I also found it amusing that this was higher than the service ceiling of the airplane I used to own. (1966 Aero Commander Model 100 with 150 hp. Service ceiling: 9750 ft, but I clawed it all the way to 11,000 once)

While everyone else is laughing about this because of the National Lampoon reference, it has deeper meaning to me. My late grandmother used to live off of that very exit, and many a Christmas in my younger days started with piling into the Family Truckster Wagon and getting off of the Garbage State right there at exit 135.....

The company behind the Portal 3D printer is Made In Space—a fitting name for this Silicon Valley team comprised of entrepreneurs, space experts and key 3D printing developers. Made In Space is located in the research park at NASA’s Ames Research Center in northern California.

Made In Space was formed in 2010 with the goal of enabling humanity’s future in space, focused on additive manufacturing technology for use in the space environment.
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That effort entailed affiliations between NASA and Made In Space over the years, supported by NASA’s Flight Opportunities Program, research and development contracts under NASA’s Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program and the space agency’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.

For example, working with NASA, Made In Space chalked up over 30,000 hours of 3D printing technology testing, and 400-plus parabolas of airborne microgravity test flights.

It supposedly took them 4 hours to print the above wrench. I don't have specs on the filament used, nozzle size, layer thickness, infill, etc. My self-designed Delta printer running conservative speeds, 0.3mm layer height, and 100% (solid) infill ran the job using ABS in less than half of their time. Of course, mine didn't ratchet, which is no surprise given the lack of final calibration in my printer.....